Talk to St. Paul's new director of the Office of Neighborhood Safety and two things become immediately clear: Brooke Blakey talks really, really fast. And this onetime cop, deputy's daughter and youth services worker has a really, really big job to do.
But the 47-year-old, whose late father also served as State Fair police chief for years, said the breadth and depth of her resume make her a good fit for the role of finding new, collaborative and community-centered ways to reduce crime and enhance public safety.
She's been a child protection worker, served with Metro Transit Police, worked in the Ramsey County Public Defender's Office and been a cop at the fair. Blakey has studied child psychology and criminology and earned post-graduate degrees in forensic psychology and forensic science.
She'd been on the job less than a month when she sat down to talk to Eye On St. Paul. But her optimism was as robust as the speed of her speech.
This interview was edited for length.
Q: OK, tell me a little bit about growing up in St. Paul. Where did you go to school?
A: St. Peter Claver for grade school and then Cretin-Derham Hall. I graduated from the U of M. Tried law school, but decided that wasn't quite where I wanted to be. I really started off my career with the YWCA in St. Paul doing youth work. That's really where I started community-based learning.
Q: Tell me about working with your dad [Chief Art Blakey] at the fair.